Posted tagged ‘brussels sprouts’

It’s 8:00 sharp on Saturday morning. I am standing in the big, bright kitchen of the Unitarian Universalist Church in Gloucester, MA. The talented author Janet Ruth Young happens to be on the board of this church, and I happen to know her. When she asked me to be a guest speaker at her church as part of their green initiative lecture series, I readily agreed. I cannot imagine passing up a chance to share my knowledge about vegan nutrition, food and recipes. I am to give a winter root vegetable cooking demonstration and talk. I know it’s not specifically a vegan topic, but I am going to make it one. A good one. No one will notice that they are eating vegan. They are only going to notice that what they are eating is delicious.

My partner Bill and I weave in and out and around each other and the giant ten burner gas stove, double oven and two-sided sink. We wash, scrub and peel vegetables at the big sink, then move them over to the chopping area. Bill is far more diligent and focused than I, and so while I move my knives, bottles of spices and jars of hemp oil, ginger Nama Shoyu salad dressing and equipment I have brought from home, he makes fast work of the vegetable prep. We have no idea how many people to expect, but I am as prepared as I can be with enough ingredients to feed 30 people.

Bill and I prepping. I am a blur…he is steady!

Folks start trickling in early. Some of my friends come, and there are lots of new faces, too. I am not nervous doing this any longer, so it is with joy and excitement that I begin. There are about 20 people, a small enough group that they can all fit into the kitchen and watch everything. I talk and talk, answer questions, and demonstrate how to cut Brussels sprouts. I give a brief lesson on massaging kale. When I explain that I use hemp oil as much as possible because it is easy to digest and filled with nutrients, everyone laughs when I confess that I have it on auto-ship from Amazon. I use a spiral slicer to make noodles from raw carrots, sweet potatoes and beets. I invite a couple of volunteers to try, too.

While I chatter away, Bill mans the ovens and the stove, roasting a giant baking sheet of the sprouts and another of chopped root vegetables in preparation for a creamy, roasted vegetable soup, toasting pecans in a dry skillet so that I can teach the group how to toast and spice nuts.

The time flies by and soon everyone is digging into the massaged kale and spiral sliced raw vegetable salad. They barely finish their full plates when I present the warm Brussels sprouts salad served over baby mixed greens, garnished with blackberries, avocado, raw pumpkin seeds and toasted spiced pecans. I show how to make a balsamic reduction, using Blackberry Ginger infused balsamic from the Cape Ann Olive Oil Co.

Toasting and Spicing Pecans

Roasted Brussels Sprouts Salad with Toasted Spiced Pecans

The final tasting is of the roasted vegetable soup. We have roasted garlic, onions, sweet potatoes, parsnips and carrots. Bill pulls the hot baking sheet from the oven and we manage to scrape all those lovely, browned vegetables into the stock pot. We add water, vegan bouillon, black pepper and minced fresh sage to the pot, bring it to a boil, then Bill turns off the heat, purees the giant potful with an immersion blender and it’s ready. He moves the pot to a serving table and I ladle out hot mugs of the soup to everyone. It’s hard to ladle soup into tiny blue Willow ware cups, but I pull it off without spilling much. The group raves and raves about the food. I answer more questions. And here I must mention how grateful I am to my friend Krissi, who takes notes for me sometimes and today, hands me a legible list of topics and reminders of what I have promised to give attention to when I email the recipes to the group. After the event is over, the first thing I do I look for leftovers. There are none. Every bite has been consumed. With enthusiasm!

Clean up today means I wander around, packing up the knives, bottles, jars and other gear while Bill and a woman from the church wash the dishes, pots and pans. We are finished by 12:45 and I leave tired and happy, knowing I have shared food, recipes, and a lot of what I know about eating a healthy vegan diet with a receptive audience. I know that those who came today learned enough to make changes in their eating habits—for their health and for their environment.

Wash and trim the Brussels sprouts and cut them in half. Put them on a large baking sheet and drizzle with the olive oil. Turn all the Brussels sprouts so that they are cut-side down on the baking sheet. Place baking sheet on center rack in oven and roast for 18-20 minutes. The bottoms of the Brussels sprouts should be nice and brown, some of the tops should be dark, too. Remove from oven, liberally sprinkle with the balsamic, toss to coat, add salt and pepper to taste.

While Brussels sprouts are roasting, heat a small skillet over medium heat on the stove. Add the pecans to dry pan and toast until they become aromatic, flipping them occasionally to prevent burning. When pecans are toasted, add olive oil, cinnamon, cayenne and maple syrup. Simmer for 1-2 minutes, stirring constantly until maple syrup bubbles. Remove pan from heat and set aside.

Wash the rest of the vegetables and fruit. Thinly slice fennel, open the avocado, remove the seed, and slice the avocado across and down. Use a tablespoon to scoop out the avocado flesh. Use a paring knife to remove skin from the orange. Chop the orange into bite-sized chunks. Reserve juice.

Assemble the salad: In a large salad bowl, add the mixed baby greens or kale. Add the orange juice, if any. Arrange the Brussels sprouts, sliced fennel, avocado chunks, orange chunks and berries on top of the greens. Sprinkle with 1/4 c more of the balsamic. Add the nuts to the top of the salad and serve immediately.
*If using kale, massage with a couple of tsp oil until tender before assembling the rest of the salad.

Method:
Place the kale in a large bowl. Drizzle with the hemp oil and massage the kale for about 3-5 minutes, or until kale is slightly wilted and softened and reduced in volume by half. Sprinkle with the lemon juice, salt and pepper and set aside.

*Spiral slice the sweet potatoes, carrot and beets. Slice the beets last because they are the messiest and will juice on the other vegetables. If the beets are very juicy, you can rinse them under cold water to keep their juice from spreading too much. Use kitchen scissors to cut the vegetable noodles into manageable lengths. Add the vegetable noodles to the kale and dress generously with Ginger Nama Shoyu dressing. Toss to coat and distribute vegetables. Arrange the avocado chunks on top of the salad. Sprinkle the top of the salad with the seeds. Drizzle a small amount of dressing on top and serve.

Method:
In a powerful blender, add the garlic cloves, the ginger, the Nama Shoyu, and the sea salt. Add 1/3 c of the oil. Blend on medium-low until everything starts to move around. Turn off blender and scrape down sides if necessary.
Turn the blender back on medium speed, then to high and blend until smooth. Take the little inner cap off of the blender cover and slowly drizzle in the remaining oil. Turn blender on high and blend only long enough to emulsify the dressing. Transfer dressing to glass jar or bottle and refrigerate until ready to use. Keeps at least two weeks in the refrigerator.
*If you don’t have a spiral slicer, you can grate the vegetables instead. It tastes just as good!

Place prepared garlic and vegetables on one or two large baking sheets so that they are in a single layer. Drizzle with enough olive oil to coat. Roast in oven 30-40 minutes, or until vegetables are tender and slightly browned.

When vegetables are done, remove from oven and transfer to a large soup pot. Add the bouillon cubes and cinnamon. Add water to about and inch below the vegetables. Heat over high heat until steaming. Remove from heat and puree with immersion blender. Alternatively, allow soup to cool slightly and puree in batches in a blender or food processor. Return soup to pot. Add the orange juice,, sage leaves and black pepper to taste. Heat until steaming hot, being careful not to let the soup boil. Taste and adjust seasonings to your liking. Serve with hearty bread and salad for a delicious meal. This soup freezes well.

Prepped and packed, I drive in the icy twilight to South Hamilton. It is easy to find the hostess’ house and I navigate the long driveway, park, and take a deep breath. This is my biggest gig so far, this group of 25 women coming out in the bitter cold to listen to me talk about and watch me cook vegetables. I am not nervous, but even so, butterflies dance in my belly as I open my trunk and gather three heavily loaded bags to bring into the kitchen. Leslie, the hostess, emerges from her garage to greet me with her bright welcoming smile. She offers to carry one of the bags and I allow this, beginning what is to be an evening of both humble submission and powerful opportunity.

I have been allowed to arrive early and have an hour and a half to set up. Using some of Leslie’s kitchenware and some of my own, I fill a large pot with water and set it on the gas range. I place steamer baskets in two smaller pots and add enough water to meet the bottom of the metal steam baskets. I empty my bags and cover the counter with bowls of vegan Alfredo sauce with mushrooms, chopped, diced and spiral sliced winter vegetables and my large cutting board. I take out my three best knives and lay them in a tidy row atop the board. I ask for a pretty plate to arrange the raw cookies I have made for the end of the event, and I am given a beautiful white pedestal dish. I arrange organic sugar-coated, heart-shaped cookies so that what is already pretty and delicious is now looking absolutely gorgeous. She takes the cookies and puts them in her dining room with the other goodies for munching. I sneak in and take them back to the kitchen. I am going to save them for the end. I want to tell about these treats, how easy they are to make, and how amazing a raw vegan cookie can be. I want to have their full attention when they take the first bite of that cookie.

Nina, the event planner for the club, arrives a little while later. She is the reason I am here and the butterflies that have been fluttering inside me rest quietly. I feel more comfortable now that her sweet familiar face in the room as I finish setting up.

I take the spiral slicer out and place it on the roomy granite-topped island counter. I know this will impress even the most doubtful of the attendees. I have a beet, a carrot and a sweet potato all ready to turn into colorful vegetable noodles. I transfer cooked quinoa to a glass bowl for heating. I transfer the creamy, spicy sauce to the biggest bowl I can find and it is filled to the brim. I wonder if I have made too much.

Before I can think about maybe being nervous after all, the door opens and opens and opens and suddenly the kitchen and dining room are packed with women. They chat, fill their glasses with wine and set out appetizers and desserts—carrots and celery and dip, crackers and cheese, trays of cookies and brownies. I am starving, so I cut up a carrot, open my jar of homemade ginger Nama Shoyu dressing, dip my carrot sticks in, and nibble. And wait.

At last, Nina stands beside me.

“Are you ready to get this going?”

I nod, and she tries to quiet the room. She taps the side of a glass bowl with one of my knives. She taps it again. Someone notices, and pushes out a powerful “Shhhhh.” All conversation stops. Well, almost all. I take a deep breath as Nina introduces me. She tells them she used to stalk me at our CSA pick up and we all laugh. I’m on.

I am lightheaded as I look at how many women stand in front of me, waiting for me to begin.

But I do. I ask how they take care of their kids—if they give them music lessons, enroll them in sports, send them to good schools. I ask them if they monitor their homework, their computer time, their television time. Some nod, others don’t. Then I ask them if they cook with their kids. I see lots of heads nodding.

“What do you cook with them? What do you make together?”

“Cookies!”

“Brownies!”

“Cupcakes!”

And I’m in the thick of it right away. I ask if they cook dinner with their kids. If they teach them how to prepare vegetables—to wash, scrub, peel, chop, roast, steam—-and the room is quiet. I boldly remind them that what their kids put into their bodies is one of the most important things to think about. I try not to sound preachy as I suggest that cooking time can be together time, family time, teaching time. So that when their kids grow up, they know how to feed themselves with healthy food. Healthy food that will nourish their bodies the same way all the other things we all see as important nourish their minds, spirits and bodies.

As I talk, I set up for the roasted vegetables, making sure the oven is preheated, spreading diced beets on a large baking tray and drizzling them with garlic olive oil. I ask a woman to help me and she puts the tray in the oven, setting the timer for me. I set up the rest of the roasting vegetables, showing off the Brussels sprouts I have harvested from my garden just the other day.

I answer questions about kale and kale chips, peeling, chopping and steaming vegetables all the while. The first big hit of the evening is the spiral slicer. No one can believe how perfect and beautiful carrots and beets are when they are turned into noodles. I slice a carrot, then I get a volunteer to slice the beet. I help her a bit and in a moment, glossy, deep-red strands of beet pile up on the counter. I take my kitchen scissors and cut the long strands a bit to make them more manageable. I get them into the boiling water. Carrots first, 3 minutes. Beets next, 5 minutes. I drain them, then sample them out, ladling the Alfredo sauce on top. The chatter that had started up again is gone as each woman tastes the small plate of food she receives.

“How did you make this sauce?”

“Why is it so creamy if you didn’t use cream?”

“How can this be vegan? Isn’t there cheese in here?”

I pause and talk about cashew cream and nutritional yeast, how to make what is often dairy-based taste just as good, if not better, vegan. There are a lot of questions about nutritional yeast, and I do my best to answer them. I do not have all the answers, but can easily direct.

Then the steamed vegetables are done and I pour them into a bowl. I shake and pour the ginger Nama Shoyu dressing over the steaming bowl, then plunge my hands in to toss the dressing. I hear gasping, but it’s really not that hot. Nina and another woman offer to plate the samples. Heaping scoops of quinoa pillow the pile of glistening dressed vegetables. The room grows quiet again as the women taste what they have been given.

The dressing is the second big hit. It’s a recipe I kind of stole from the restaurant Life Alive in Lowell, MA. There are two newer branches, one in Cambridge and one in Salem, and it’s one of my favorite places to eat. I always get the same thing—the Goddess bowl, which is their signature dish. I am addicted to the dressing. I am so addicted that I have spent hours trying to duplicate it. I finally nailed it a few months ago and now can share it with confidence, even if I have to sheepishly confess that it is absolutely not my recipe, only an adaptation of theirs.

I remember to talk about GMO foods, the “Dirty Dozen“, and, of course, I include bits and pieces of my vegan life. I talk openly and honestly about the nutrients in food, the importance of a varied diet. I offer information about general health, what is not good about dairy products, and explain exactly what vegan means: no animals. No animal products. So, yeah, no cheese, so yogurt, no butter, no fish. I was asked if I miss any of it.

Not for one second.

The timer goes off for the roasted vegetables. The woman whom I have volunteered to be in charge of the oven turns and pulls two heavy trays of roasted beets, Brussels sprouts, onions, carrots, potatoes and sweet potatoes from the dark, high heat. I take each tray and do my best to fill the last giant bowl without dropping anything on the floor. The trays are heavy and I am already tired. I sprinkle the vegetables with fresh rosemary that I have cut from my garden this same morning, and add a bit of salt and pepper. I steal a Brussels sprout and a sweet potato chunk before the final round of sampling begins.

The women eat and chatter, and I stand back, wondering if I have missed anything. My notes have been tossed to the back counter, unneeded.

I space out for a minute and then notice a tall, gorgeous woman passing around a tray of chocolate-dipped macaroons. I go over to her and touch her shoulder. I know she has taken the time to make this beautiful, time-consuming dessert, and it breaks my heart to say these words. I say them anyhow.

“Um, please. Would you mind holding back on those? I have a little dessert and I am afraid that if everyone eats one of those, they won’t have room to try mine. You could pass them out after…”

Her face flushes and she looks down, then up at me.

“Oh, I’m sorry! I didn’t know.”

I honestly could cry as I look at her, but I hold steady.

“That’s okay. Thank you for bringing those. They look great. Mine are really small—so everyone will still have room for yours after.”

The pedestal with the heart-shaped raw vegan ginger cookies is passed around.

“What’s in here?”

“These are really good!”

“Is is nutmeg? Do I taste nutmeg?”

With the last of my “crowd energy”, I give the ingredients and tell them there is a link to the recipe on my blog. They line up to collect my card and I promise each eager face that I will post right away and include the recipe for the dressing.

Energized by a couple of my cookies, I work the crowd afterward. I thank everyone for coming, and seek out the women who have helped me throughout the evening. I am touched by their excitement for my cooking and by their welcoming smiles, their food confessions, their desire to make even small changes in the way they prepare food and eat.

I return to the counter, prepared to clean up and find that the women have done it for me. Everything is washed, dried, and stacked neatly for me to pack up. Nina and I are the last to leave, and she offers to carry one of the bags out to my car. I tell her that would be great.

In a powerful blender, add the garlic cloves, the ginger, the Nama Shoyu, and the sea salt. Add 1/3 c of the oil. Blend on medium-low until everything starts to move around. Turn off blender and scrape down sides if necessary.

Turn the blender back on medium speed, then to high and blend until smooth. Take the little inner cap off of the blender cover and slowly drizzle in the remaining oil. Turn blender on high and blend only long enough to emulsify the dressing.

Transfer dressing to glass jar or bottle and refrigerate until ready to use. Keeps at least two weeks in the refrigerator.

This is amazing drizzled onto warm steamed vegetables, although it is also good on cold salad.

I am preparing for my fourth vegan cooking talk and demonstration. The secret is that it is not technically a vegan cooking class—I have been invited by the Essex County Garden Club to talk about how to use winter vegetables.

The back story: Last spring I joined a CSA. I bought one share for our family and had the pleasure of visiting Alprilla Farm each Wednesday afternoon to choose whatever I desired. Each week I brought home a giant bag packed to the brim with the most beautiful organically grown vegetables. The selection was vast—eight or nine types of greens and heirloom tomatoes, several types of beets, onions, carrots, peppers, kale and squashes. Cauliflower, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, potatoes, beans, soy beans, and much, much more. Whenever I arrived, I met someone new and fun to talk with about how to prepare and eat the bounty offered. I met a woman named Nina who seemed to be on my schedule and she would follow me around, asking what to do with celeriac, or how I managed to get my kids to eat kale.

It turns out that she is the event planner for the Essex County Garden Club. One afternoon, she asked if I would be interested in sharing my knowledge about vegetables—why they are good to eat and how to prepare some of the more daunting ones—and I knew it would be a wonderful opportunity to teach how to cook vegetables. It would also be a chance to share vegan cooking with a lot of people— a chance to be on the offense about being vegan! I knew I would be be able to show the beauty in the way I choose to eat without having to do anything other than be myself.

So I’m in my kitchen. I want to show off, thus I have been prepping all day. I clean, peel and dice beets, carrots, red potatoes and sweet potatoes. I wash kale and tear the leaves from the stems. I spiral slice beets and carrots. I make ginger nama shoyu dressing for steamed vegetables. I scurry out to my garden and cut fresh rosemary and sage. The show-stopper will definitely be the beet and carrot “noodles” turned from the spiral slicer because I also make my delicious vegan Alfredo sauce with mushrooms.

I make raw ginger cookies for dessert sampling, too, taking the time to press out the dough and cut hearts with a cookie cutter, because it’s close to Valentine’s Day and I love to share these amazingly simple and flavorful treats. (And because Nina, who came to one of my vegan cooking classes here in my kitchen and tried one before, asked so nicely.)

Raw Ginger Cookies

The plan is to roast some vegetables in garlic olive oil, steam some and serve with quinoa and ginger nama shoyu dressing, and boil the noodles and serve with the Alfredo sauce. Then cookies. I know everyone will ask for the sauce recipe, so here it is.

Prep for Essex County Garden ClubVegan Alfredo Sauce with Mushrooms top center and middle row second bowl in

3 T olive oil or flavored olive oi, divided (I like to use mushroom sage oil for this recipe, but plain is fine)

1 12 oz pkg sliced mushrooms

1 large sweet onion, diced

1/8 t crushed red pepper flakes

generous pinch freshly grated nutmeg

1 c peas, fresh or frozen

2 c vegetable stock or vegetable broth

1/3 c nutritional yeast

1/4 c minced fresh sage leaves

1/4 c orange juice concentrate

3 c raw baby spinach

salt and pepper to taste

Method:

Heat 2 T oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add mushrooms, turn heat to high, and cook, tossing every few minutes, until mushrooms begin to brown and they release their liquid.

Heat the remaining T oil in a small skillet over medium heat. Add the onion and cook about 7 minutes, or until onion is soft and beginning to brown.

Add the cooked onion to the mushrooms. Add nutmeg and crushed red pepper flakes, stir, and cook for another minute. Add the vegetable broth or stock and bring to a boil. Stir in the peas. Cook for 2 minutes.

Stir in the cashew cream and the nutritional yeast. Reduce heat to low and cook for about 5 minutes more. Add the sage and the orange juice concentrate. Stir well to incorporate. Remove pan from heat and fold in the baby spinach. Grind a generous amount of black pepper into the sauce, taste, and add a little salt to taste.

*another way to make cashew cream: soak 1 c raw cashews in cold filtered water for at least an hour but overnight is fine, too. Drain, rinse, and drain again. Pour soaked cashews into a blender and add 1 c filtered water. Blend until smooth. Use for this recipe. Freeze any leftovers for next time. Keeps at least 3 months in freezer.

All packed up and ready to go. No room left in the fridge! Notice that somehow my kombucha scoby jar is front and center on the top shelf.